Poolse minister van Buitenlandse Zaken neemt Franse les met oog op eventuele Europese topbaan (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op donderdag 3 oktober 2013, 9:26.
Auteur: Andrew Rettman

BRUSSELS - Polish foreign minister Radek Sikorski has taken an intensive French language course amid talk he might be the next EU foreign relations chief.

His office told EUobserver he did it during the summer holidays at the Millefeuille-Provence academy near Avignon, in France.

Sikorski himself, who already speaks English, Russian and some Dari (a Persian dialect, from his time as a photo reporter in Afghanistan in the 1980s), joked: "After the course, when making an order in a restaurant in France, for once I got what I wanted."

When asked if he wants the EU job when it comes up next year, he did not rule it out, but said only that he is "flattered" by the question.

The Millefeuille-Provence school hit the headlines in 2010 when a French minister invited the newly-appointed EU foreign relations chief, British politician Catherine Ashton i, to take one of its courses.

She did not do it and rarely speaks French in public.

Her predecessor, Spanish politician Javier Solana, also spoke mainly in English, despite having some grasp of French.

But the Ashton and Solana precedents do not mean that Sikorski's efforts are in vain in terms of French support for a potential EU bid.

"It is, of course, key that every top job in the EU should be manned by someone having a good command of French, and all the more so in the foreign affairs field considering the importance of French language in international relations," a French diplomat told this website.

"French is one of the official EU languages. It is important that this is maintained and that French continues to be used," Dominique Rogues, the director of the Millefeuille-Provence academy, noted.

She said the "immersion" courses last between one week and two weeks and cost between €3,500 and €7,000.

She added that many "high-level officials" use the school. They stay in its 18th century building and do six one-hour-long French lessons each day. They are also made to speak French at mealtimes and during social activities in the evening.

On past form, names for EU top jobs which emerge at an early stage rarely get them.

The appointments are also not made on pure merit. It depends how the candidates' political factions do in EU elections and whether EU capitals want a strong personality in the EU institutions to compete for attention with national ministers.

But for her part, Judy Dempsey, a Brussels-based analyst at the US think stank, the Carnegie Endowment, is a Sikorski fan.

She believes that Germany would back him, but is less sure on France and the UK.

"I think he would made a very good HRVP [high representative for foreign affairs]. He has an intrinsic understanding of what Europe is, what it needs and what it must become … And, very important, he is willing to change his mind," she said, referring to his new Russia-friendly profile, which comes after years of Russia-hostile remarks.

Charles Grant, the director of the London-based think tank, the Centre for European Reform, noted that Sikorski and Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt are both "extremely well qualified" to replace Ashton.

But he warned that they tend to speak too "frankly" for some EU countries' tastes.

"Now that the EEAS [European External Action Service] is up and running and everybody understands the role of the HRVP, I hope we will see someone with a big profile who can actually lead EU foreign policy rather than acting as a spokesman for EU foreign ministries," Grant said.

As for Sikorski's joke on French food, Grant added: "He speaks English better than most English people, having attended Oxford University, so he should have no problem applying those skills to French."


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